Eighth Grade Summer 2014 Part One Write (at least) three journal entries: one in June, one in July, and one in August. You may write them at the end of your 7th grade journal or at the beginning of your 8th grade journal, but head them with the names of the months rather than numbering them. You could write about how you are spending your summer, your thoughts about current events or summer movies or books you are reading or life in general, or anything else. Part Two Read two of the following. Across Five Aprils...... Irene Hunt Uncle Tom’s Cabin...... Harriet Beecher Stowe Cold Sassy Tree...... Olive Ann Burns Pudd’nhead Wilson...... Mark Twain My Antonia...... Willa Cather Letters of a Woman Homesteader...... Elinore Pruitt Stewart Hondo...... Louis L’Amour Riders of the Purple Sage...... Zane Grey The Jungle...... Upton Sinclair The Age of Innocence...... Edith Wharton The Great Gatsby...... F. Scott Fitzgerald A Farewell to Arms...... Ernest Hemingway For Whom the Bell Tolls...... Ernest Hemingway The Grapes of Wrath...... John Steinbeck The Book Thief...... Markus Zusak The Chosen...... Chaim Potok The Lilies of the Field...... William E. Barrett Your book reports on these books will have two sections. In the first section, describe any history that can be learned from the book (from what was going on in America or the world at the time to how people dressed, interacted, entertained themselves, worked, etc.). In the second, explain why you liked or did not like the book. Perhaps you liked some things and did not like others; if so, explain what you liked and what you didn’t and why. In any case, be specific and support your opinions with examples from the book. Avoid generalizations such as saying the book was interesting or boring. If you think it was interesting, tell me what interested you; if you think it was boring, tell me what bored you. Your name, the name of the book, and the author’s name should be at the top of the page. Do not provide a plot summary. Each report should be about 400-500 words and be carefully written and proofread. Part Three Read a biography of any 20th century American. Don’t worry if the subject was born before the 20th century or has lived into the 21st; what is important is that significant events in his or her adult life occurred in the 1900s. Write a short report explaining why the subject of the biography is famous and whether, after reading the biography, you admire this person and why or why not (not summarizing his or her life). Again, your name, the name of the book, and the author’s name should be at the top of the page; your report should be 400-500 words and be carefully written and proofread.